How Do Configuration Shifts in Fragmented Energy Governance Affect Policy Output? A Case Study of Changing Biogas Regimes in Indonesia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theory
2.1. Fragmentation of Regime Complex and Its Output
2.2. Conceptual Framework
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. Administrative Fragmentation (2007–2009)
4.2. Conflictive Fragmentation (2010–2013)
4.3. (Limited) Cooperative Fragmentation (2014–2016)
We tried to cooperate with BIRU, but it just did not happen because we have different technology and approach,(SWEN, Personal Communication, June 2018, translated from Bahasa)
They (SWEN) uses different technology (fibre digester) and works a lot with many government projects. I am curious about their motivation and vision,(YRE, Personal Communication, June 2018, translated from Bahasa)
4.4. Reduced Fragmentation: Centralization (2017-2018)
From 2017, there are no more other ministries having biogas programs, because all (biogas programs) are moved to (under) DAK or SAF (special allocation fund scheme), below the MEMR. This decision was confirmed by the presidential office to follow national policy about one data policy.(DB MEMR, Personal Communication, June 2018, translated from Bahasa)
5. Discussion
- The biogas regime in Indonesia underwent a transition from administrative, via conflictive to cooperative fragmentation from 2009 to 2016, which contributed to the rise of biodigesters disseminated.
- Within this transition, non-state actors (NGOs and companies) were key to cooperate with multiple government bodies, business actors, and local organizations. Some stakeholders accepted to collaborate (cooperative fragmentation), while some rejected, due to conflicts of interest (conflictive fragmentation).
- A transition to cooperative fragmentation occurred in 2013–2016, where there had been an increase in the distribution of power and degree of cooperation within the biogas regime. BIRU’s decision to start partnerships with various government programs and various funding sources contributed to increase in the number of biodigester dissemination and quality of training activities.
- In 2017, the cooperative fragmentation regime was transformed into a centralization model that reduced the distribution of power within the regime, followed by the decline of its policy output.
6. Conclusions
- The changes on the distribution of power and degree of cooperation within biogas governance architecture triggered periodical shifts of configuration within the regime, from administrative fragmentation in 2007–2009, to conflictive fragmentation in 2010–2012, to cooperative fragmentation in 2013–2016, and to reduced fragmentation (and centralisation) in 2017.
- The cooperation between state and non-state actors contributed to increasing the number of biodigester dissemination more than doubled in three years, from 16,730 in 2013, to 37,999 in 2016. This finding implies that higher degrees of cooperation and distribution of power within a governance architecture contribute to increasing the policy output of a (cooperative fragmentation) regime complex.
- The argument on cooperative fragmentation is further strengthened by the regime change in 2017 into the centralization model that reduces the distribution of power within the regime and contribute to influencing the decline of its policy output.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Related Stakeholders > | National Government | Local Government | Private Sectors | NGO | Civil Society | Academics | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Key Institution | Programs | ||||||
Hivos (International NGO) | BIRU (Biogas for household) | Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources | Agriculture agency, Bandung regency | Construction Partner Organization; Yayasan Kontak | YRE (House of energy foundation) | Loan partner organization; Local Farmers cooperative (KPSBU) | su-re.co (sustainability and resilience-company) |
Ministry of energy and mineral resources (MEMR) | RE (renewable energy) programs | MEMR
| Energy agency, west java (EAWJ) | SWEN (a biodigester company) | Hivos, YRE | Directorate of research and community development, University of Indonesia, | |
Ministry of Agriculture (MA) | BATAMAS (biogas with community), UPPO (organic fertilizer unit) | MA
| Agriculture agency, Bandung regency (AABR) | SWEN | Bogor agriculture institute | ||
Ministry of Environment and Forestry (MEF) | Proklim, com-dev in the conservation area | MEF
| SWEN | ||||
Coordination of policy planning and implementation |
|
Appendix B
Key Institutions | Programmes/Topics | Project Reports, Policy Documents |
---|---|---|
Hivos, YRE | BIRU |
|
Ministry of energy and mineral resources (MEMR) | RE programs |
|
Ministry of Agriculture (MA) | BATAMAS, UPPO |
|
Ministry of environment and forestry (MEF) | Proklim, com-dev in the conservation area |
|
Coordination of policy planning and implementation |
| |
Policy and regulation |
|
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Conflictive Fragmentation | Cooperative Fragmentation | |
---|---|---|
Origin of theories | Debates about interlocking institutions | Diverse systems for governing problems |
Assumptions | Architectures of governance are almost never fully interconnected and integrated | A wide-ranging distribution of power fosters a policy to include more people or stakeholders inclusively, performing coordination |
Normative degree | Some stakeholders agree that the architecture of governance must affirm the value of fragmentation as “diversity” | The diversity of initiatives is the invisible hand of a market of institutions that results in better distribution of functions and effects. |
Typical examples | Transnational governance | Civil society and/or private sectors lead the governance architecture |
Criteria/indicators | Exclusiveness and incoherence | Distribution of power and cooperation |
Regimes | Conflictive Fragmentation | Cooperative Fragmentation | |
---|---|---|---|
Aspects and indicators | |||
Governance architecture | Distribution of power | Involvement of wide-range of institutions | Involvement of wide-range of institutions |
No partnerships in policy/program’s planning and implementation | Extant partnerships in policy/program’s planning and implementation | ||
No distribution of institutionalized functions, responsibilities, and power across institutions/programs | Institutionalized functions, responsibilities, and power across institutions/programs are distributed | ||
No task division in accordance with the available personnel capability, across institutions/programs | Extant task division among programs, in accordance with the available personnel capability | ||
Coordination and cooperation | No national biogas-related policy or plan is coordinated/integrated (e.g., national biogas plan) | A national biogas-related policy is coordinated/integrated | |
No (in)formal provisions to support coordination among organizations across administrative levels and sectors | Extant (in)formal provisions to support coordination among organizations across administrative levels and sectors | ||
No significant involvement of local institutions in biogas programs or in the creation of biogas-related institutions | Extant significant involvement of local institutions in biogas programs or in the creation of biogas-related institutions | ||
Conflict of interest among institutions | Joint programme, partnership among institutions in overcoming dissemination barriers | ||
Policy output of the regimes | |||
Indicators; The number of biogas digesters disseminated; The amount of information (training) provided. |
Year Period | 2007–2009 | 2009–2012 | 2013–2016 | 2017 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Regime configuration | Administrative fragmentation | Conflictive fragmentation | (Limited) cooperative fragmentation | Reduced fragmentation |
Situation | Various ministries competed for the budget for biogas programs | NGOs (Hivos and YRE) cooperated with the MEMR (Ministry of Energy), SWEN (biogas company) worked with the MA (Ministry of Agriculture) | BIRU extends the collaboration with other government biogas programs | Government biogas programs are centralized under the MEMR |
2010–2011 | 2012–2013 | |
---|---|---|
Distribution of power | Hivos entered the biogas governance architecture, as a new power in the regime | Hivos established YRE (a local NGO), it increased the distribution of power within the governance architecture |
Coordination and cooperation | Hivos had cooperation with the MEMR through BIRU programme | YRE tried to expand BIRU cooperation, but hampered by competition with SWEN and MA |
Policy output of the regime | Dissemination number increased | The rate of rise of dissemination number was increasing |
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Budiman, I.; Smits, M. How Do Configuration Shifts in Fragmented Energy Governance Affect Policy Output? A Case Study of Changing Biogas Regimes in Indonesia. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1358. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041358
Budiman I, Smits M. How Do Configuration Shifts in Fragmented Energy Governance Affect Policy Output? A Case Study of Changing Biogas Regimes in Indonesia. Sustainability. 2020; 12(4):1358. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041358
Chicago/Turabian StyleBudiman, Ibnu, and Mattijs Smits. 2020. "How Do Configuration Shifts in Fragmented Energy Governance Affect Policy Output? A Case Study of Changing Biogas Regimes in Indonesia" Sustainability 12, no. 4: 1358. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041358
APA StyleBudiman, I., & Smits, M. (2020). How Do Configuration Shifts in Fragmented Energy Governance Affect Policy Output? A Case Study of Changing Biogas Regimes in Indonesia. Sustainability, 12(4), 1358. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041358